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US$9.99 Original price was: US$9.99.US$5.00Current price is: US$5.00.
US$9.99 Original price was: US$9.99.US$5.00Current price is: US$5.00.
Efuru. 50th Anniversary Edition
SIN: 9789789566198
ISBN: 9789789566198
Author: Flora Nwapa
Language: English
Publication Date: 12/20/2016
Digital download
Digital file type(s): Epub
However, Flora Nwapa also challenges and—perhaps unwittingly at the time of her writing in the early 1960ies— deconstructs local awe of female fecundity and beliefs in the lake goddess, Uhamiri’s ability to give and protect children and life itself.
The novel, Efuru ends as follows, “She dreamt of the woman of the lake. … She gave women beauty and wealth but she had no child. .Why then did women worship her?” Efuru, apparently dreamt that Uhamiri did not have children of her own. But does this dream really raise doubts about the goddess’/water’s ability to give children/life?
Oguta-Igbo culture’s highest value is children and female fecundity; a woman’s ability to produce children is believed to be her greatest significance. According to pre-Christian local religious beliefs, the “woman of the lake,” Uhamiri is a Water Goddess who gives children, just as water is known to be the source and sustainer of life. Flora Nwapa deconstructed such beliefs by creating an anti-thesis and dialectic dynamics. Her fate of childlessness represents a dichotomy to social expectations. Oguta’s ideal woman is a “mother of many.” Yet, the childless heroine is portrayed as extremely positive. From this very opposition emerges the recognition of a woman’s worth beyond her fecundity. She is empowered by a local deity and moves ahead beyond—not instead of—childbearing.
Efuru—and by extension Nwapa herself—has shed doubts on the sole benefit of the divine gift of fertility to women. In doing so, she actually corroborates indigenous beliefs in the Lake Goddess who can give to humans even more than children, such as in the words of one old woman at Oguta, “Uhammiri gives children and everything else.” Efuru and her dreams provoke the understanding that water/the Lake Goddess/woman (of the lake) must be valued by herself, as an asset to society even without a child. Nwapa’s dialectical opposition creates a dynamic that vindicates womanhood and projects female powers and potentials on several levels from the deep past into the far flung future.
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